|
WALKING ON THE MOON
Journey to The Lost World
Ever since Walter Raleigh described
a mountain of crystal on his deluded expedition up the Orinoco to find
Lake Manoa and El Dorado, the sandstone plateaux of the Guayana Shield
have attracted curiosity and conjecture, botanists and explorers, missionaries
and fortune hunters.
Roraima is the highest of the extraordinary mesa
mountains that puncture the plains of the ancient shield. Its flanks rise
sheer above the surrounding forests and savannahs, reaching 2,800 meters.
Its surface spans some 40 square kilometres, over six times the size of
Gibraltar. In the nineteenth century, reports given at the Royal Geographic
Society from this far-flung corner of the Empire convinced many members
that life on the summit of Roraima, isolated from the world, could have
been suspended in its evolutionary development.
Speculation, at the
height of the great evolutionary debates in England, reached fever pitch.
In April 1877, only six years after the publication of Descent of Man,
an editorial in The Spectator pleaded "Will no one explore Roraima
and bring us back the tidings which it has been waiting these thousands
of years to give us?" Various frustrated expeditions answered the
call, but it took until 1884 for the incongruous-sounding pair of Everard
Im Thurn and Harry Perkins, sponsored by the Royal Geographical Society,
the Royal Society and the British Association, to bring back finally descriptions
of its mysterious summit. Im Thurn's account of his Jack and the Beanstalk
adventure, brimming with breathless conjunctions, is pure Boy's Own:
"Up this part of the slope we made our
way with comparative ease till we reached a point where one step more
would bring our eyes on a level with the top - and we should see what
had never been seen since the world began [...] should see that of which
all the few, white men or red, whose eyes have ever rested on the mountain
had declared would never be seen while the world lasts - should learn
what is on top of Roraima."
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle drew on these vivid accounts
to pen his classic, if somewhat far-fetched The Lost World, published
in 1912, wherein the intrepid Professor Challenger encounters pterodactyls
and prehistoric cavemen running amok atop the mountain. Two Hollywood
films later, scientists are still finding new species across the reach
of these islands in time.
The Pemon Indians that live in Roraima's shadow
regard the 'tepuy' ('mountain' in their tongue) as the Source of All Waters,
home of the Goddess Kuín, grandmother of all Men. Its name means 'large
blue-green mountain.' The Pemon cherish and revere Roraima. Richard Schomburgk,
in his early Victorian expeditions with his brother, noted "All their
festive songs have Roraima for subject matter, and when we told them of
the beauties of Pirara [...] their comment was and remained: 'It cannot
be nice in that place: there is no Roraima there.' " In 1915, Mrs
Cecil Clementi, wife of a diplomat posted in Guiana, became the first
woman to ascend the mountain. She, like all visitors before or since,
was spellbound. "We felt smitten with awe and fear. We seemed so
minute and presumptuous to venture unbidden into the presence of these
towering monsters in a land that knew us not... Well may the Indians feel
that the place is holy ground!"
Even though Julio, my sexagenarian
Pemon guide, has climbed Roraima more times than he has grandchildren
(no less than twenty), he still gets emotional about the mountain. "Look,"
he'd say, pointing to the mountain with no more than his protruding lips,
then pause, "beautiful." Julio first climbed Roraima in 1952,
"when I was a youngster still," he chuckles. He guided the first
expedition up the mountain's twin, Kukenan. He spent three weeks looking
for a way up.
"Was he ever scared?" I ask him.
"Maybe the first time," he answers,
"but then I would whisper some taren (magical invocations), and always
brought my machete with me."
Julio's present machete looks like it dates from
another British expedition, this time in 1964. On its blade, the words
"Stainless Steel" are still legible, but below them, only the
upper letters of "Birmingham" have survived decades of diligent
sharpening.
We spent our first night camped by the River Kukenan,
close to the villages where was villagers welcomed and fed Im Thurn. The
settlements have long since been abandoned, although one can still make
out the flattened earth circles where thatched huts once stood. From this
point, Roraima and Kukenan loomed over the evening sky to the east and
north-east, their sides etched with white-line waterfalls.
Roraima's south-western flank runs
at a near right angle to Kukenan's wall, forming an amphitheatre of rock
into which unsuspecting clouds drifted and dissipated. Only rarely do
these "sermons in stone" deign to reveal themselves fully. The
rest of the time they play hide and seek, skulking behind banks of vapour.
From here, Schomburgk "gazed in dumb amazement at the mass of mountain
with its sparkling bands of water spreading itself out before me, until
it became suddenly enveloped in an envious veil of mist." Im Thurn's
Indians never tired of telling him that Roraima cloaked itself "whenever
approached by white men." With up to four metres of rainfall a year
in the area, the fabulous mountain lies, more often than not, in the eye
of the imagination.
A Marlborough and Oxford man, Im Thurn began his
sojourn in British Guiana as a magistrate in the Pomeroon district in
1882. There he lived for the next eight years on a low hill, some 30 acres
in extent, isolated from any other dry ground by a great riverside swamp.
Little wonder this "quiet, unassuming chap" - as one Oxford
contemporary described him - would jump at the chance of attempting the
ascent of fabled Roraima. It took Im Thurn and Perkins, a Crown surveyor,
seven long weeks by foot and dugout to reach their camp on the Kukenan
from Georgetown.
The next day dawned
cloudy and misty - no bad thing for the tramp across the savannah towards
our shrouded goal. We climbed gently along the path, occasionally negotiating
sticky bogs imprinted, like a mud logbook, with hundreds of trekking footsteps.
Only occasionally did the ledge that cuts across Roraima's flank and up
which we would have to climb, appear, caught in brief snatches of sunshine.
Until Henry Whitely, an enthusiastic ornithologist and orchid collector,
first proposed this route as a means of ascent, all previous expeditions
had concluded that Roraima was inaccessible. Barrington-Brown - the discoverer
of Guyana's Kaietur waterfalls - declared that a hot air balloon was required.
In 1878, Boddam-Wetham professed exasperated, "nothing less than
a winged Pegasus could expect to attain the summit of the bare red wall
that raised itself for hundreds and hundreds of feet." As we reached
the base camp at midday, the rock fortress seemed all the more impregnable.
The savannah around the base camp is rich in grasses,
shrubs, bracken and heath-like plants, but also numerous orchids, including
the yellows, whites and roses of Epidendrum on long spindly stems. Here
too, the pitcher plant Heliamphora thrives, capturing insects in its sticky-bottomed
tubular mouth. The Schomburgk brothers were so impressed with the vegetation
they dubbed the skirts of Roraima a "botanical El Dorado." In
the forest above, dwarf compared to its low-lying counterparts, the stunted
trees and palms become thickly matted by swathes of bamboo. As one climbs
higher, green mosses wrap and muffle everything - rock, trunk and branch
- and all feels damp, soggy and slippery.
The climb is as spectacular
as it is capricious, clambering up tripping roots, wood and smoothed stone,
round rocks and boulders, across boggy mulch, between weaves of trunks,
until emerging by a small brook at the base of the cliff. Catching your
breath, you look up through a gap in the canopy. The vertical wall of
rock thunders up into the heavens, shooting down waterdrop arrows which
explode all around. Boddam-Whetham reached this point, but found the way
to the ledge blocked by insurmountable boulders. Im Thurn wondered if
he too would be forced to abandon the ascent, his doubts exacerbated by
the broken-up ledge, and, more importantly, by the waterfall which vaulted
down from the summit at the far end of the ledge.
Having spent the best part of a week
cutting a trail through the matted, soaked undergrowth, on December 18th
he finally struck out with his posse of Pomeroon and Pemon Arekuna porters.
Even now, after so many people have Grand-Old-Duke-of-York'd up this mountain,
it's hard going. But it's difficult to imagine what unforgiving work slashing
this trail for the first time must have been like. In an expedition to
the Guyanese north face of Roraima in 1971, Adrian Warren's party cut
a trail along the mountain's upper slopes. They progressed only two miles
in six days. An assiduous amateur botanist, Im Thurn was also collecting
plant specimens as he went.
As we climbed higher, sweeps of cloud would reduce
visibility to a few yards. As quickly as they closed in, they disappeared.
When we finally emerged from the forest, the prospect below resembled
a conjured chessboard of forest and plain, sun and rain - the Enchanter
Light pondering his next move. From here, we made our way down and round
a giant boulder, before climbing again towards the roar in the distance.
The waterfall was in full flow. Donning waterproofs for the first time,
we hugged the edge of the cliff and scurried as best we could over slimy
stone shingles under pounding waves of water.
Beyond the waterfall, the slope rises
more steeply, effectively becoming a gully between Roraima's dark, menacing
ramparts. Picking our way between hundreds of boulders, islands of numerous
ferns, Befaria heather and Heliamphora struggled, gradually diminishing
in size and number. Soon we'd come level with the mythical summit of the
mountain, enter, as Im Thurn put it "some strange country of nightmares
for which an appropriate and wildly fantastic landscape had been formed,
some dreadful and stormy day, when, in their mid career, the broken and
chaotic clouds had been stiffened, in a single instant, into stone."
One small step onto
a tepuy's surface is one giant leap onto another planet. It's the Earth,
but not as we know it. Stygian amphitheatres of rock surround you, carved
over millennia by relentless rains and winds. Faces and profiles, animals
and hideous creatures, "apparent caricatures of umbrellas, tortoises,
churches, cannons and of innumerable other incongruous and unexpected
objects" emerge in their strange, other-worldly shapes. The topography
dances in a funereal carnival of invention. Faint paths of rubbed-away
lighter rock provide the only bearings among the ghostly, striated rock.
Vegetation is sparse, reduced to weird and wonderful plants, lichens and
mosses. Water is everywhere, running in rivulets, coursing through crags,
gathering in crystal-bottomed pools, faithfully seeking the mountain's
edge from which to hurl itself lemming-like.
Pagoda labyrinths, valleys
of crystals, dark chasms and inky sinkholes that disappear in the depths
punctuate Roraima's moonscape surface. Star-shaped, Catherine wheel flowers
on long spiny stems, carpets of fluorescent green moss, spiky yellow-orb
flowers and carnivorous pitcher plants cling to nooks and crannies, sparkling
in the rare moments of blinding sun. Stunted Bonnetia trees with wide
boughs and spindly leaves recall Japanese Zen gardens, the primeval soup
landscape washed over by Hokusai waves of brush-stroke clouds. The odd
bird flits and chatters, but otherwise, the silence is deafening. Unerring.
You lose all sense of scale, any track of time. The land is old - these
were once the valleys of Gondwana and Pangea, brimming with gold and diamonds,
charged with Life's current for over two billion years. The landscape
is in constant motion. Fluid. Yet completely static - like a giant cog
in the wheel of time, slowly clunking the gears of evolution, it has witnessed
every wonder of Nature, and every folly of Man.
To the north of its
surface, the borders of Venezuela, Guyana and Brazil meet. Roraima divides
their respective watersheds: the Orinoco, Essequibo and Amazon. Roraima
is more than a mountain. In few parts of the planet are the elements more
present. The Guayana Shield's water cycle, from tepuy to forest to sea
and back again, resembles "Chapter 2: Hydrology" in a 14-year
old's Geography textbook.
Venezuela's Canaima National Park, the world's
sixth largest park which protects Roraima, fulfilled all five criteria
for inclusion as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The waterfalls which spring
from the tepuys - including the world's tallest, Angel Falls - weave together
to form the fishhook arc of the River Caroní, which in turn disgorges
into the mighty Orinoco. Where the two rivers meet, the Guri Dam furnishes
some 70% of the country's electricity. As much as 40% of the tepuys' species
are entirely endemic, their evolution isolated for millennia. Of the park's
five frogs in the Oreophrynella order, each claims its very own tepuy.
Although creatures little larger than thumbs are hardly the stuff of science
fiction yarns, regional expert and guide Roberto Marrero recently published
a map detailing UFO phenomena across the national park. The tepuy's profile
make the most Spielbergesque landing site you could possibly encounter.
I ask Julio about his
experiences, eager for stories of strange beasts. The only animals he's
spotted, in turns out, are the foxes and dogs that come to scavenge the
visitors' food. Roraima makes an inhospitable host. The summit is cold
and damp, clothes never dry, and you never shake the feeling you shouldn't
be present in this reanimated Dürer engraving at all. The rock's eerie,
Wagnerian forms begin to seep under your skin. After three nights, you're
ready to come down.
As soon as we began our descent, banks of clouds
drew in around us, and Roraima's drawbridge clanked shut. Nearing the
Kukenan river on our way back, the mountains slowly began to emerge. We
struggled across the river, its hungry waters lapping at our waists and
rucksacks. On the far bank, Julio called me, nodding his head back towards
Roraima. I turned to see the mountain's walls glowing blood red, serene
in the still evening air. "Parting looks," says the old Welsh
proverb, "are magnifiers of beauty."
A paragon of modesty, Im Thurn insisted the conquering
of Roraima amounted to no more than "a long walk ending in a successful
scramble" according to R.R. Marrett. I think he was being bashful.
Climbing Roraima, then and now, is a journey to a unique lost world.

Of the many tour operators who organise tours
of the Gran Sabana and Roraima, among the best is Ivan Artal of Ruta Salvaje
Tours in Santa Elena de Uairén, by the bus terminal. Tel/Fax: (088) 951-134;
Cel: (014) 886-3833;
email: rutasalvaje@cantv.net
website: http://geocities.com.rutagransabana.
They also rent camping equipment, and are the Sabana's only rafting operator.
Ivan's father, Pablo, a talented artist and architect, runs their campamento
up on a hill above the town. They have two comfortable and innovative
cabins for rent.
|